Chattanooga Times Free Press

Pathologis­t: Stephon Clark shot 8 times, 7 from behind

- BY DON THOMPSON AND SOPHIA BOLLAG

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Sacramento police shot Stephon Clark seven times from behind, according to autopsy results released Friday by a pathologis­t hired by Clark’s family, findings that call into question the department’s assertion the 22-year-old black man was facing officers and walking toward them when he was killed.

Dr. Bennet Omalu, whose study of a degenerati­ve brain condition in football players prompted the NFL to adopt new safety rules designed to prevent concussion­s, also determined Clark took up to 10 minutes to die.

Police officers, concerned Clark could be alive and armed, waited about five minutes to approach him after the shooting in his grandmothe­r’s backyard. Clark was not armed; police apparently mistook a cellphone in his hand for a gun.

“The propositio­n is he was facing officers is inconsiste­nt with prevailing forensic evidence,” Omalu said at a news conference with family attorney Benjamin Crump.

He said it was not clear if Clark would have survived had he gotten immediate medical attention, and he noted that any of the six bullets that hit him in the back and one in the neck could have been the fatal shot. An eighth bullet went into Clark’s thigh.

Sacramento police responded in a brief statement that said the department had not yet received the official report from the Sacramento County coroner’s office. It noted that the coroner’s death investigat­ion is independen­t from the investigat­ion being conducted by police and the state Department of Justice.

The shooting occurred March 18. Two officers responding to a call of someone breaking car windows shouted that Clark had a gun before firing.

Video released by police of the nighttime shooting shows officers at the corner of Clark’s grandmothe­r’s house and him on the backyard patio. It’s unclear if Clark knows the officers are there. He moves toward the officers’ position as they peer around the corner and open fire. Clark staggers sideways and falls on his stomach as officers continue shooting. Twenty shots in all were fired, police said.

The shooting has produced nearly daily angry but peaceful protests in the downtown area of California’s capital city.

On Thursday, hours after creating an emotional interrupti­on at his brother’s funeral, Stevante Clark helped defuse tension by asking protesters not to block thousands of fans from entering a downtown NBA arena for a third night.

Police in riot gear stood waiting outside the Golden 1 Center as fans wove through barricades and fencing to enter a Sacramento Kings-Indiana Pacers game. But protesters never came, heeding calls from Stevante Clark and Black Lives Matter organizers to avoid the arena. Instead, they blocked rush hour traffic on nearby downtown streets.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dr. Bennet Omalu, a pathologis­t, points to a diagram showing the gunshot wounds he found on the body of police shooting victim Stephon Clark in Sacramento, Calif. Omalu spoke during a news conference Friday. He was hired for Clark’s family to conduct...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dr. Bennet Omalu, a pathologis­t, points to a diagram showing the gunshot wounds he found on the body of police shooting victim Stephon Clark in Sacramento, Calif. Omalu spoke during a news conference Friday. He was hired for Clark’s family to conduct...

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